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These terrible things will likely sometimes just be hapenstance, but
maybe less if we just avoid being in or too near any cloud. Sincere condolences to all Tim's family and friends. michael ------------------------- Kettering UK Telegraph By Tim Hawkins A GLIDER pilot survived a head-on mid-air collision with another aircraft by kicking his way out his cockpit and parachuting to safety. Steve Algeo, 50, escaped the crash but his fellow Welland Gliding Club member, Peter Heywood, 48, of Finedon, was unable to get out of his aircraft and died when it plummeted to the ground. An Air Accident Investigations report into the collision in North Yorkshire in October 2006 has ruled it was "a consequence of misfortune". The report, published yesterday, describes how Mr Algeo, of Beatty Gardens, Corby, made his dramatic escape. Gliding club members were flying in scuddy cloud when Mr Algeo suddenly saw the orange wing tip and nose of another glider and realised a collision was inevitable. The report says: "Instinctively he entered a descending left turn, with the objective of preventing a cockpit-to-cockpit collision, which he thought highly probable and likely to be fatal. "He recalled that the other aircraft may have been descending out of scuddy cloud, and that it may have been flying fast and straight towards him. He ducked his head as the other aircraft's wingtip was about to impact his canopy, and immediately heard a loud bang. "The two aircraft collided almost head on, each aircraft's canopy being severely damaged by the other's wing. He then felt a cold rush of air, and his aircraft rolled to the right to an inverted position. "He did recall operating the canopy jettison lever, but the canopy did not part from the glider. "A substantial part of the canopy had been destroyed in the impact and the pilot later remembered kicking himself free of the cockpit and being momentarily delayed in locating his parachute release, before operating it." Mr Algeo suffered a broken bone in one hand, cuts and bruises. Mr Heywood's body was fou nd close to the wreckage of his glider. His harness was found unfastened and the canopy release mechanism had been operated. He was wearing a parachute but it had not been operated. The lengthy report adds that each pilot had accepted the risk of encountering another aircraft with little or no time to see and avoid it. A gliding instructor was at the launch point when he heard a "crunch", which he realised was a mid-air collision. He told investigators how he saw "two gliders, seemingly locked together". He said: "The wreckage separated leaving one glider spinning around and the other with debris also falling from the sky." Several safety recommendations have been made since the accident, including the British Gliding Association providing reference material for clubs, instructors and pilots that identify the risks of flying close to cloud or in poor visual flying conditions. Last Updated: 11 January 2008 8:27 AM Page 1 of 1 |
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You missed the KEY point about that crash. The pilot who died had modified
his aircraft with some additional wiring which prevented the canopy jettison operating. A substantial cable attached with ties over-rode the forward emergency release of his canopy and he stood no chance of leaving his glider in time. By contrast the survivor was a instructor who regularly practised (on the ground) leaving his machine in an emergency. It paid off for him. Mark well and inwardly digest. Alistair Wright Melrose Scotland |
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